A parallel pattern detection engine (PPDE) comprise multiple processing units (PUs) customized to do various modes of pattern recognition. The PUs are loaded with different patterns and the input data to be matched is provided to the PUs in parallel. Each pattern has an Opcode that defines what action to take when a particular data in the input data stream either matches or does not match the corresponding data being compared during a clock cycle. Each of the PUs communicate selected information so that PUs may be cascaded to enable longer patterns to be matched or to allow more patterns to be processed in parallel for a particular input data stream.
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1. A method to recognize objects comprising:
providing a database of patterns representative of objects to be recognized;
storing an operation code in a predefined sector of said database;
generating a data stream representative of unknown objects;
providing an address pointer to select one or more of said patterns in said database;
correlating a pattern selected from said patterns in said database with a block of data from said data stream; and
generating a status signal based upon a result of the correlation and the operation code stored with the selected pattern, wherein the operation code contains flag bits, wherein said flag bits indicate one of a single wildcard matching operation, a multiple wildcard matching operation, a last matching operation and an inverse matching operation, wherein if said flag bits contain bits indicating said single wildcard matching operation then a match is indicated if a byte in said data stream matches a byte with said single wildcard operation code, wherein if said flag bits contain bits indicating said multiple wildcard operation then a match is indicated if an indeterminate number of bytes in said data stream does not match a byte with said multiple wildcard operation code, wherein if said flag bits contain bits indicating said inverse matching operation then a match is indicated if every byte except a byte with said inverse operation code matches a byte in said data stream, wherein if said flag bits contain bits indicating said last matching operation then a match is indicated if a byte in said data stream is a last byte in a pattern.
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The present application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/757,187, entitled “Parallel Pattern Detection Engine,” filed Jan. 14, 2004 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,243,165, which is incorporated by reference herein. The present application claims priority benefits to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/757,187 under 35 U.S.C. §121.
The present invention is related to the following U.S. patent applications which are incorporated herein by reference:
Ser. No. 10/757,673 entitled “A Configurable Bi-Directional Bus For Communicating Between Autonomous Units” filed Jan. 14, 2004; and
Ser. No. 10/756,904 entitled “Intrusion Detection Using A Network Processor And A Parallel Pattern Detection Engine” filed Jan. 14, 2004.
The present invention relates in general to methods and systems for performing fast partial or exact pattern matching.
Recognizing patterns within a set of data is important in many fields, including speech recognition, image processing, seismic data, etc. Some image processors collect image data and then pre-process the data to prepare it to be correlated to reference data. Other systems, like speech recognition, are real time where the input data is compared in real time to reference data to recognize patterns. Once the patterns are “recognized” or matched to a reference, the system may output the reference. For example, a speech recognition system may output equivalent text to the processed speech patterns. Other systems, like biological systems, may use similar techniques to determine sequences in molecular strings like DNA.
In some systems, there is a need to find patterns that are imbedded in a continuous data stream. In non-aligned data streams, there are some situations where patterns may be missed if only a single byte-by-byte comparison is implemented. The situation where patterns may be missed occurs when there is a repeated or nested repeating patterns in the input stream or the pattern to be detected. A reference pattern (RP) containing the sequence that is being searched for is loaded into storage where each element of the sequence has a unique address. An address register is loaded with the address of the first element of the RP that is to be compared with the first element of the input pattern (IP). This address register is called a “pointer.” In the general case, a pointer may be loaded with an address that may be either incremented (increased) or decremented (decreased). The value of the element pointed to by the pointer is retrieved and compared with input elements (IEs) that are clocked or loaded into a comparator.
In pattern recognition, it is often desired to compare elements of an IP to many RPs. For example, it may be desired to compare an IP resulting from scanning a finger print (typically 1 Kilobyte for certain combinations of features defined in fingerprint technology) to a library of RPs (all scan results on file). To do the job quickly, elements of each RP may be compared in parallel with elements in the IP. Each RP may have repeating substrings (short patterns) which are smaller patterns embedded within the RP. Since a library of RPs may be quite large, the processing required may be considerable. It would be desirable to have a way of reducing the amount of storage necessary to hold the RPs. If the amount of data used to represent the RPs could be reduced, it may also reduce the time necessary to load and unload the RPs. Parallel processing may also be used where each one of the RPs and the IP are loaded into separate processing units to determine matches.
Other pattern recognition processing in biological systems may require the comparison of an IP to a large number of stored RPs that have substrings that are repeated. Processing in small parallel processing units may be limited by the storage size required for the RPs. Portable, inexpensive processing systems for chemical analysis, biological analysis, etc., may also be limited by the amount of storage needed to quickly process large numbers of RPs.
Pattern detection or recognition is a bottleneck in many applications today and software solutions cannot achieve the necessary performance. It is desirable to have a a hardware solution for matching patterns quickly that is expandable. It is also desirable to have a system that allows multiple modes of pattern matching. Some applications require an exact match of a pattern in an input data stream to a desired target pattern. In other cases, it is desirable to determine the longest match, the maximum number of characters matching, or a “fuzzy” match where various character inclusions or exclusions are needed.
There is, therefore, a need for a method and system for pattern detection that is mode programmable and comprises a large number of parallel processing units that is expandable to enable variable pattern lengths to be matched as well as allowing additional processing units to be added to increase matching speed.
A parallel pattern detection engine comprises a large number of small processing units building blocks that perform pattern detection. These processing units have multiple modes of pattern detection and each has memory for storing patterns. A large parallel interface bus supplies input data to an input buffer. Selected input data is coupled in parallel to each processing unit so that each processing unit compares, in parallel, input data received on the parallel bus. Each processing unit is also coupled to a parallel address bus so that detection pattern data may be selectively loaded into each processing unit. The addresses of each processing unit comprises its identification (ID). Processing units that generate a match of its detection pattern to a pattern in the input data, according to its specific mode, have their corresponding ID forwarded by an ID selection unit to an output buffer. The data from the output buffer is coupled to the interface bus for sending results of a particular input data stream comparison. Each of the processing units has a “chaining” or cascading communication interface that allows a particular processing unit to be coupled to its corresponding adjacent processing units for generating larger detection patterns greater than a single PU can handle or for determining specific types of pattern matching. The parallel input bus structure and the chaining communication interface facilitate adding groups of the parallel pattern detection engines to create larger systems for speed or for handling a larger number of patterns or for both purposes.
The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features and technical advantages of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be described hereinafter which form the subject of the claims of the invention.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without such specific details. In other instances, well-known circuits may be shown in block diagram form in order not to obscure the present invention in unnecessary detail. For the most part, details concerning timing, data formats within communication protocols, and the like have been omitted inasmuch as such details are not necessary to obtain a complete understanding of the present invention and are within the skills of persons of ordinary skill in the relevant art.
Refer now to the drawings wherein depicted elements are not necessarily shown to scale and wherein like or similar elements are designated by the same reference numeral through the several views.
Sequential matching of a data stream in software is currently a central processing unit (“CPU”) intensive task. Thus, high performance is difficult. The pattern matching processing unit (hereafter PU) architecture can provide high performance matching because it is a piece of hardware dedicated to pattern matching. The PU provides more efficient searching (matching) because every input pattern is being matched in parallel to a corresponding target pattern. Parallel matching is possible because a virtually unlimited number of the PUs may be cascaded. Additionally, each PU has built-in functionality that can reduce the number of necessary PUS by incorporating modes that allow matching comprising wild cards (don't cares in the target pattern), multiple wildcards, and inverse operations. The PU architecture's fast pattern detection capabilities are useful in network intrusion detection, database scanning, and mobile device security applications. Additionally, with their built-in distance computation, “fuzzy” pattern detection may be implemented which are particularly useful in image processing and life sciences applications.
Each PU 500 has limited memory to store pattern data 601. If a pattern is long, it is possible to merge several PU 500 units for storing a long sequence of pattern data 601. For example if two PU 500 are used, then during the beginning of a pattern detection phase, the memory 507 of the first of the two PU 500 units is used. The address pointer of the first PU 500 is modified according to the matching mode and the operation codes 602. When the address pointer reaches its last memory position a last signal 650 is sent to the second of the two PU 500 units in order to continue the matching process using the remainder of the pattern data 601 stored in the second PU 500. Control data on control bus 502 is used to initialize the second PU 500, in this case, so that it only starts matching when it receives the “last” signal 650 from the first PU 500. Also in this case, if a “reload” pointer address is indicated during the matching process, the address pointer of both of the two PU 500 units used for the long sequence of pattern data 601 must be updated. This is accomplished by sending a “reload” signal 651 to the appropriate PU 500 (containing the initial pattern 601 bytes). Since the number of bytes in a sequence of pattern data 601 is not specifically limited, more than two PU 500 units may be used in the manner discussed. Again initialization control data on control bus 502 configures a PU 500 to execute as an independent PU or as a cascade PU.
When the matching mode is a “fuzzy” match, pattern distance computation unit 611 calculates a present distance value stored in distance register 612. If two or more PU 500 units are used in cascade to store pattern data 601 used for a fuzzy match, then the distance value is sent on distance signal 652 to the next PU 500 in a cascade so that a final distance value may be determined and stored in final distance register 608 of the last PU 500 in a cascade.
The following description may refer between
The fast pattern match technology utilizes local memory (e.g., register array 507) in each PU 500 which contains a pattern 601 and flag bits (Opcodes 602) that specify options. These options may include a single wildcard, multiple wildcard, last, and inverse matching operations. A single wildcard matching means that a match is indicated if the byte having the single wildcard matching Opcode 602 set matches the current byte in an input stream. A multiple wildcard matching means that a match is indicated if an indeterminate number of bytes in sequence not match the byte with the multiple wildcard Opcode 602. Inverse matching means a match is indicated if every byte except the byte with the inverse Opcode 602 matches a byte in an input stream. Last Opcode 602 means that the byte is the last byte in a pattern.
Global registers include ID register 509, read address register 614, control register 505 and registers in register array 507. Additional global registers, active register 706, match register 708 and select register (not shown) may be used to designate PU 500 as active, matched, or selected for writing configuration data. The ID of a PU 500 is an ID that is unique across a chip containing multiple PUs and is used to identify what pattern has been detected in a data stream being coupled in parallel to more than one PU 500. The counter 714 is used to index through the stored pattern 601 for comparison to bytes 801 in an input data stream (from input bus 503) and the comparator (not shown) in compare unit 511 compares the pattern 601 with the input data 801 one byte at a time.
When PU 500 comes online, all registers are initialized to zero (reset). Next PU 500 receives unique ID from the input bus 503 which is stored in ID register 509. PU 500 then waits until it receives additional commands. The first command is a select command which activates PU 500 to receive further configuration commands that apply to PU 500 only. At this point the global registers may be loaded. Bytes of data are sent to the register array 507 which include the pattern data 601 and the corresponding Opcode data 602. When the configuration is complete and the active register 706 is set to “active”, PU 500 waits for the packet reset signal 802 to enable the read address 614. This indicates that a new input packet is being sent to the PU 500 to begin the matching phase.
During the matching phase, one byte is sent to PU 500 at each clock cycle. PU 500 compares the byte stored (601) in the current register array position (determined by the address 614) in register array 507 with the input byte in input register 504 and checks the Opcode (602) for the byte in the current register array position of the pattern stored in 601. If there is a match or the Opcode 602 is set to a single wild card match, the pointer is incremented to select the next read address in address register 614. If the Opcode 602 for the current byte in pattern 601 is set to multiple wildcard, the pointer to address register 614 holds its current value. If a match was not found, then the pointer is reloaded. This process continues until the pointer is at the last position of a pattern and a match occurs. At this point, the match register 708 is set in PU 500. The final phase of the process is to report the found match. If the match register 708 is set, the output logic circuitry 512 sends the ID of PU 500 to the output bus 513.
PPDE 100 is an IC comprising multiple PU 500 units and other logic functions. Input/output (I/O) interface 101 couples PPDE chip 100 to system functions. I/O interface 101 couples 64 bits of input data to IC input bus 120 which in turn couples to input buffer 103. Data is written into input buffer 103 in locations determined by write address 102. Data is read from input buffer 103 using read address 108. Data is read from input buffer 103 in 8 bit bytes using multiplexer (MUX) 115 controlled by select line logic 109. Input bus 503 is coupled to each of the N PU 500 units. I/O interface 101 also couples control data to global control 107 which sends 24 bits of ID data on ID bus 501 and 4 bits of control data on control bus 502 to each PU 500 unit (PU1-PUn).
If the pattern byte and the input data byte do not compare in step 903, then in step 904 a test is done to determine if Opcode 602 is set to “match” for the pattern byte. If Opcode 602 is set to “match” in step 904, then this is not a desired result and the pointer is reloaded back to the first pattern byte in step 913 if it is not already there. A branch is then taken back to step 902. If Opcode 602 is not set to “match” in step 904, then a test is done in step 905 to determine if Opcode 602 is set to “inverse”. If Opcode 602 is set to “inverse” in step 905, then this is a desired result and the pointer is incremented in step 914 and a branch is taken back to step 902. If Opcode 602 is not set to “inverse” in step 905, then a test is done in step 906 to determine if Opcode 602 is set to “wildcard”. If Opcode 602 is set to “wildcard” in step 906, then this is a desired result and the pointer is incremented in step 914 and a branch is taken back to step 902. If Opcode 602 is not set to “wildcard” in step 906, then a test is done in step 907 to determine if Opcode 602 is set to “multiple wildcard”. If Opcode 602 is set to “multiple wildcard” in step 907, then the pointer is held in step 908 and a branch is taken back to step 902. If Opcode 602 is not set to “multiple wildcard” in step 907, then in step 909 the pointer is reloaded and a branch is taken back to step 902.
The operations discussed relative to
The PPDE 100 has four matching modes: exact, longest, maximum and fuzzy. Exact matching may be used for aligned or non-aligned data and may incorporate the regular expressions such as single wildcard, multiple wildcard, inverse, or inclusive set. The exact matching mode may be utilized in applications such as network intrusion where line speed matching is critical and a binary match or not match response is only needed.
In the longest match mode, each PU 500 unit keeps track of the number of consecutive bytes matched and does not reset until the end of a pattern packet. In the longest match mode, each PU 500 outputs the number of matched bytes along with its ID to the ID selection unit 114 (
In the maximum matching mode, each PU 500 keeps track of the number of bytes matched and does not reset until the end of a pattern packet. In this mode, each PU 500 outputs the number of matched characters along with its ID to the ID selection unit 114. The ID selection unit 114 then outputs the ID of the PU 500 with the maximum number of matches and the value of the maximum number to the output buffer 105.
In the fuzzy matching mode, each PU 500 “looks” for the closed pattern and then outputs the ID of the PU 500 with the closest match and a corresponding distance value quantifying the closeness of the match to ID selection unit 114 which in turn outputs the results to the output buffer 105. The distance is the result of a comparison between the input Pattern and the Reference pattern (RP) previously stored in memory. The distance calculation method is based on a norm that is user selectable. Several norm can be used, the norm can uses the “absolute value of a difference” operator. The successive elementary distances can be summed in the case of the Manhattan distance, i.e. dist=sum (abs (IEi−REi)) or the maximum value thereof is selected in the case of the maximum norm to determine the final distance. i.e. dist=max (abs (IEi−REi)) where IEi (Input Element) and REi (Reference Element) are the components of rank i (variable i varies from 1 to k) for the input pattern IP and the stored prototype Reference pattern RP respectively. Note that “abs” is an usual abbreviation for “absolute value”. Other norms exist, for instance the L2 norm such as dist=square root (sum (IEi−REi)2. The L2 norm is said to be “Euclidean” while the Manhattan and maximum norms are examples of “non-Euclidean” norms. Other Euclidean or non-Euclidean norms (such as the match/no match) are known for those skilled in the art. In particular, the “match/no match” norm, represented by the “match (IEi, REi)” operator is extensively used. The closest match is the pattern with the lowest result. Fuzzy matching is useful in image processing and real time data processing where the input data stream may have white noise superimposed on data.
A representative hardware environment for practicing the present invention is depicted in
Although the present invention and its advantages have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Kravec, Kerry A., Saidi, Ali G., Slyfield, Jan M., Tannhof, Pascal R.
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